London 2012: Phillips Idowu faces monumental task - coach - BBC News London 2012: Phillips Idowu faces monumental task - coach - BBC News
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London 2012: Phillips Idowu faces monumental task - coach - BBC News

London 2012: Phillips Idowu faces monumental task - coach - BBC News

Olympic silver medallist Phillips Idowu is facing a "monumental battle" to win gold in the triple jump at the London Games, says his coach Aston Moore.

Idowu's main rivals, Frenchman Teddy Tamgho and American Christian Taylor, have better personal bests.

American Will Claye, 20, will also pose a threat to the 33-year-old Londoner.

"I believe it will be a monumental battle of will and talent. You hope that Phillips comes out on top," Jamaican-born Moore told BBC Sport.

"The fourth place could be a jump that would normally have won the competition, but you could finish fourth this year.

"[But] it's an Olympic medal, it's never going to be easy or everyone would be doing it."

At the Beijing Games, Idowu's best jump was 17.62m, but he was beaten into second by 17.67m from Portugal's Nelson Evora, who has been ruled out of the London Games by a stress fracture.

Since then new faces have emerged in the form of 21-year-old world champion Taylor, who beat Idowu in Daegu in August, world championship bronze medallist Claye and 22-year-old Tamgho, whose personal best of 17.98m is third on the all-time list.

"The two American guys are very dangerous," Moore continued. "Sometimes you can have good athletes but you know you've pretty much got their measure. [Yet] these guys are good winners.

"I'm almost forgetting the young French guy Teddy Tamgho, who we haven't heard from yet this year but he's been jumping 17.90s for the last two seasons."

Idowu, who came out on top against his rivals in his opening competition of the season at the Diamond League meeting in Shanghai last weekend, was devastated after coming second in Beijing and Moore says the 2009 world champion's target has not changed.

"The gold - that's what he's preparing for, that's what he's ready for and he will be disappointed with anything other than gold.

"He wanted to win the last one but he came second by 5cm. He wants to put that right on home soil.

"He's a Londoner, a Hackney boy. I think he's going to love it."

UK Athletics' national triple jump coach Moore, himself a former triple jumper for Great Britain, started working with Idowu a few months before the Beijing Olympics and admits he has seen a change in the athlete ahead of London.

"I wouldn't say that pressure is getting to him but certainly with a lot of the athletes, as it's a home Olympics, people are much more focused, and I've noticed that from him," said Moore.

"He's much more focused on what needs to be done and how it needs to be done. My job is to make sure it doesn't become over the top and he starts looking at every last detail. I think together we can manage that quite well.

"Those five years are his most successful so that makes our relationship reasonably tight because I am the person that has helped him through his best period as an athlete."

Moore guided Commonwealth gold medallist Ashia Hansen to a world record and has worked with UK Athletics since 2000, but he admits he will feel the nerves when Idowu lines up for his first jump at the Olympic Stadium in London.

"I'm usually most nervous in the first round, because this is the one. This is the one that sets the scene for everything.

"I want the jump to send a particular message out to every other competitor. So I'm most nervous about that one because I want him to nail it, and then get better from there. Normally my blood pressure and heart rate and everything jump on that one.

"Then, it's work as usual."



London Games Conference returns on November 21st - MCV

The changing rules of digital games and marketing will be laid bare at November’s London Games Conference.

Returning for its fourth year, the popular conference and networking event will again examine emerging trends in digital games.

LGC 2012 is run by Intent Media, publisher of MCV and Develop. 

The first 100 tickets are available at an early bird cost of £199. To attend, contact Hannah.Short@intentmedia.co.uk or call 01992 535 646.

The four-hour conference format returns, this time with extra presentation options during the after-event networking dinner for attendees.

For details on partner packages and sponsorship opportunities, contact Lesley.Blumson@intentmedia.co.uk or call 01992 535 646.

A call for speakers has also opened today – contact Michael.French@intentmedia.co.uk for more details. 

Previous speakers have included influential execs from the global games business including Mike Mauler (GameStop), Heiko Hubertz (BigPoint), David DeMartini (EA), John Clark (Sega), plus representatives of trend-setting digital games firms like PopCap, Jagex, Ngmoco and Miniclip.

Last year’s audience-voting mechanic will also be part of proceedings. 

“LGC has established itself as the most incisive event looking at the changing digital games business,” said Michael French, editor-in-chief of MCV and Develop.

“This year the event will focus on distribution platforms shaping the industry such as Steam and iTunes, plus how brands use social media, with best practice advice for Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.”

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London 2012 Olympics: Usain Bolt fails to fire in season opener - Daily Telegraph

You could chalk it down to the rarest of off nights, which is obviously the way he was trying to play it afterwards. You could put it down to the capricious Czech weather, with a wind swirling around that made it distinctly parky in the early evening. Indeed, his opponents, like Chambers, all used the weather to explain away the performance.

Yet Bolt himself was making no excuses. He had run into a headwind of 0.8m per sec but still expected to get inside his season’s best 9.82sec, the fastest time in the world this year that he had set earlier in the month in Kingston. He had been talking 9.7sec.

Instead, he sounded just a mite perplexed, unable to understand what had just befallen him. “It was very bad. No excuses. My legs normally feel good, and they drive me along but today I didn’t feel any power. I really can’t argue,” he said.

“It doesn’t bother me but I started the way I don’t usually feel. So that does bother me a little bit. It was going through the motions, really. Normally when I run I can tell what went wrong. I felt really good coming into the race but my first 40 was really, really bad.”

He reckoned he did not know what his rivals would think but Collins made that clear. “This gives you hope to come back and race him again,” he said.

As for Chambers, the search for the qualifying standard must go on to Paris at the start of next month. His time was at least his best since he was given the all-clear to attempt to qualify for the Olympics but, also, finishing behind veteran American Darvis Patton (10.22sec) and Jamaican Commonwealth champion Lerone Clarke (10.26sec) demonstrated the amount of hard work ahead. In the B race, Mark Lewis-Francis won in 10.36sec.

Still, perhaps it is too easy to overly worry about Bolt. He was reflecting here only on the eve of the race that expectations of him are of course always absurd because he has performed so consistently at an extra-terrestrial level. “You have to understand that he is human. He can’t run 9.5 every day,” sympathised Collins.

Nonetheless, this was reminiscent of Bolt’s 2010 season when, battling against injuries, he began to struggle, lost in Stockholm and had to end his season early.

By the end, though, he was still trying to put on a brave face as he was, after all, still a winner. “Even losing one race, losing two races, doesn’t matter. It’s about getting to the Olympics,” he shrugged. “And doing your best.” But this was far, far from his best and you could just imagine Yohan Blake and Tyson Gay rubbing their hands.



Many tickets for London 2012 remain unsold - BBC News

The BBC has learned that nearly a third of the Olympics tickets which went on sale earlier this month remain unsold.

The London 2012 organisers had expected that the 928,000 tickets would all be snapped up quickly by eager buyers, but that has not proved to be the case.

There are still more than 20 sessions with availability for sports like boxing, basketball, beach volleyball and weightlifting.

In total there are nearly 300,000 tickets remaining on sale.

That is in addition to the more than one million football tickets which are left.

For the first time since London 2012 tickets went on sale last year there is now a genuine prospect of the Games not selling out.

Demand was so high last year, with 22 million tickets applied for in the initial ballot, that it seemed an inevitability that every ticket would be sold.

Ticketing, though, has turned out to be the greatest challenge for London 2012 organisers.

There have been a number of problems with the website, which is run by Ticketmaster, with some people last summer even having to be informed that they had not been successful in buying the tickets which they had originally been told that they had got.

Many others were frustrated by the ballot process, which left more than a million applicants empty handed after the first round of sales.

A London 2012 spokesman refused to be downhearted about the slow sales since tickets were made available again on May 11th.

"We have delivered on our promise to give those people who missed out last year another opportunity to buy tickets and thousands did.

Analysis

I'm sure that many of you will have your own views about why the demand for London 2012 tickets has dropped off so sharply. One of the main reasons is surely frustration with the process

"With nine weeks to go before the Games start, we are in a fantastic position - ahead of where we expected to be when tickets first went on sale in 2011.

"There are still tickets available, but many sports have limited availability."

The chances, though, of empty seats at London 2012 have definitely increased.

There are still another 150,000 non-football tickets which will not go on sale until next month.

So even if the London organisers manage to shift the current batch of 300,000 tickets, their job is far from done.

The BBC has learned that nearly a third of the Olympics tickets which went on sale earlier this month remain unsold.



London 2012 Olympics: Kosovo athlete barred from competing as independent - The Guardian

Kosovo's best medal hope, judo champion Majlinda Kelmendi, has said she will compete at the Games for Albania after the International Olympic Committee ruled that she could not enter as an independent under the Olympic flag.

The decision came as the IOC also ruled out the idea of female Saudi athletes competing under the Olympic flag as a way of circumventing opposition within the kingdom to their presence in a Saudi team.

Kosovo's independence is recognised by 80 countries including the UK but not by the UN or the IOC. The sports minister of the former Yugoslav province, Memli Krasniqi, said Kelmendi and Kosovo had been treated unfairly, and compared their case with the invitation to Yugoslav athletes to compete under the Olympic banner at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992, when the Serbian leadership in Belgrade was under international sanctions for its participation in war crimes.

"It is an extremely disappointing development and contrary to the values enshrined in the Olympic charter," Krasniqi said.

"There are no good reasons to turn down a genuine request by an athlete who is among the best in the world. Kosovo sport has been suffering from this isolation for 20 years and we have athletes who have been forced to leave in disillusion to compete for other countries."

The minister said it was ironic that a Yugoslav team had been allowed to compete in Barcelona despite international sanctions imposed because of the role of the then leader, Slobodan Milosevic, in orchestrating crimes against humanity. Kosovo was one of the targets of Milosevic's ethnic cleansing campaigns and 10,000 Kosovans were killed before Nato intervention forced Milosevic to withdraw his troops in 1999.

"In Barcelona, when Yugoslavia under Milosevic was under heavy sanctions, the IOC was so humane it invited athletes from Yugoslavia to compete. We would love to have similar treatment for our athletes," Krasniqi said.

Kelmendi is the fifth ranked judoka in the world in the under-52kg class, and won three Grand Prix and World Cup events last year. She has both Kosovo and Albanian citizenships and had hoped to represent Kosovo for the first time in London.

The decision on her participation came at an IOC meeting in Quebec City, Canada, which also saw the organisation's president, Jacques Rogge, rule out Saudi women competing under a neutral flag. "There is absolutely no need to consider the possibility of the participation of Saudi women under the IOC flag," he said.

Saudi Arabia is one of three countries to never include women in their Olympic teams. The others, Qatar and Brunei, plan to bring female athletes to London but the Saudis appear unwilling, an attitude which has brought criticism from human rights groups and others. "It's not an easy situation," Rogge said of talks with Saudi officials on the issue. "There is a commitment. We're working steadily with them to find a good solution."

David Mepham, UK director of Human Rights Watch (HRW), which has called for tough IOC action over the Saudi team, said the group was worried at the seeming impasse. He said: "It's looking unlikely now that the Saudis will include women in their team for the London Games, which is a great concern for us."

HRW is calling for the IOC to bar Saudi Arabia from London unless it takes steps beyond just including women in the Olympic squad, Mepham said: "We also want them to take steps back in Saudi Arabia to ensure that women and girls can participate meaingfully in sport. We've documented the systematic discrimination which really prevents this – there are a few private gyms, but essentially women and girls are not allowed to participate in sport."



Vauxhall Mallards and Great Witchingham seek progress in ECB National Club Championship - EDP 24

Friday, May 25, 2012
4:36 PM

The two remaining Norfolk sides in the National Club Championship are set for a showdown this weekend.

Vauxhall Mallards will face Great Witchingham on Sunday in the group semi-final of the Kingfisher Beer Cup after both teams recorded comfortable wins in their second round ties last weekend.

Mallards registered an eight-wicket win at reigning East Anglian Premier League champions Cambridge Granta.

Skipper Paul Bradshaw removed both Granta openers with only 20 runs on the board, before Stuart Lipshaw’s five-wicket burst saw the hosts fold to 130 all out in the 40th over. The off-spinner claimed five for 23.

Carl Amos and David Turner put on 70 for the first Mallards wicket and Amos went on to steer the visitors to victory in the 40th over with an unbeaten 72 from 104 balls.

Witchingham thrashed Boston by 205 runs as Sam Arthurton, pictured, hammered a century.

Arthurton made 133, while James Hale (48no) and Carl Rogers (41) also contributed in a total of 279 for four from their 45 overs.

Boston were then skittled out for just 74, with Jonathan Spelman claiming four for 32 and two wickets apiece for James Spelman and Tom Collishaw.

Sunday’s match at Great Witchingham starts at 1pm.

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    London Gets Gold for ID Fraud - Yahoo Finance

    NOTTINGHAM, UNITED KINGDOM--(Marketwire -05/23/12)- London could be set for a rise in identity fraud this summer as new figures from Experian CreditExpert reveal that 7.7 million Britons from outside the capital are set to descend on some of the UK's worst areas for ID theft - while 1.9 million Londoners plan to escape.(1)

    London, the boroughs around many of the Games venues in particular, is already home to the UK's worst ID fraud hotspots, with rates of attempted fraud up to 11 times higher than the national average. These include East Ham (11 times higher), Woolwich (6.5 times higher) and Stratford itself (six times higher).(2)

    There will be a mass influx of people into these areas, carrying personal information in the forms of UK bank account details, and credit card details. This leaves individuals at a high risk of Identity Fraud with individuals, in unfamiliar surroundings, exercising less caution than they would normally adhere to in their normal surroundings. This presents a massive opportunity to fraudsters, with visitors likely to have passports and other pieces of personal identification about their person, be freely using smart phones and unsecured WiFi hotspots, and also potentially sharing hostels or rented accommodation with strangers all of which increase the risk of identity theft.

    Visitors are therefore advised to keep a close eye on their personal information, and on their credit report following their visit for any signs of unusual activity. CreditExpert also provides alerts if your personal details appear anywhere unexpectedly online so it is easy to protect yourself pro-actively.

       TOP FIVE RISKS    TOP FIVE TIPS TO STAY SAFE ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Passports         Think about how much sensitive information you really need                   to have about your person - if your hotel booking has your                   card number and address, do you need to carry it around                   with you, for instance? Likewise, don't take your passport                   out with you unless you absolutely have to. If you are                   staying in a hotel for the Games, ask for sensitive                   documents to be securely stored in the hotel safe when you                   are not using them. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- PIN codes         Make sure that no-one else can see you enter your PIN code                   at ATMs and chip and pin machines, particularly in large                   crowds. Do not write down or carry your PIN code with you. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Smartphones       If you have a smartphone, you'll certainly want to                   photograph and tweet your time at the Olympics, but be                   particularly careful what you share when connected to an                   unsecured wireless network. Also ensure you switch off                   Bluetooth and roaming settings when not required and                   ensure you use a password. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Post              If you're going to be one of the lucky ones visiting                   London for a few weeks to enjoy the Games, think about                   what you'll do with your post. Intercepted post is one of                   the key ways in which fraudsters can take people's detail,                   so it could be worth setting up a redirect for the                   duration of the Games. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Face-to-face      Check the credentials of anyone asking for your personal                   information, whether by phone, face-to-face or over the                   internet. If in doubt, don't do it!  

    The Experian CreditExpert research reveals that no fewer than one in six Britons (16 per cent) is planning on visiting London during the Olympics, half as tourists and half to attend the Games themselves. Seventeen per cent of people coming to the capital have not been for more than a decade, with a further three per cent making their first ever trip to the city.

    Nearly six out of 10 (59 per cent) will be staying for several days. Although one in four (25 per cent) will be staying in hotels and one in five (21 per cent) with friends, a significant minority (four per cent) will risk staying in a hostel and two per cent will be renting a property or someone's spare room - some 154,000 people.(3)

    And although they are concerned about large crowds (23 per cent) and the expense of London (20 per cent), just three per cent are worried about identity fraud.

    The risk of ID fraud among visitors is arguably heightened by the decision of many Londoners to quit the capital during the course of the Games. One in 14 (seven per cent) are looking to leave London for the duration of the Olympics, with a further one in six (17 per cent per cent) planning to get out of the city for at least some of the period.

    But it's not just newcomers who need to be careful. The one in 20 Londoners taking on a lodger or renting out a room or their whole property need to be aware they are putting themselves at risk of ID fraud by inviting a stranger into their home and are advised to ensure personal details are locked away and post collected promptly.

    Peter Turner, Managing Director at Experian Interactive, commented: "This is set to be a once in a lifetime summer. But that doesn't mean people should let their guard down - just because you are holidaying in the UK, you should still take the same precautions you would if you were on a city break to Europe.

    "Identity fraud is one of the fastest-growing crimes of the 21st century, and anyone could be at risk from fraudsters getting hold of their personal information, particularly if they are in an unfamiliar area, renting a flat short-term or a room in a B&B. Likewise if you are a homeowner letting a spare room just for the Olympics, do ensure all your personal details are kept safe from visitors."

    "This is why it is so important to have proper safeguards in place to protect your identity. With Experian CreditExpert if the worst should happen you will be alerted to any significant changes to your credit report so that you can react quickly and keep the risks to a minimum."

    Identity fraud hotspots

       Top 10                 10k households   Top 10 in            10k households nationwide Cases                        London Cases ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Slough                 25               East Ham             78 London (all)           22               Woolwich             46 Gravesend              20               Stratford            43 Birmingham             17               Ilford               33 Luton                  16               Walthamstow          27 Manchester             15               Harrow               27 Leicester              14               Cheapside            26 High Wycombe           13               Lewisham             26 Peterborough           13               Hatfield             26 Windsor                12               Enfield              26  

    To avoid becoming a victim of identity fraud this summer, Experian CreditExpert suggests some further tips:

         1. Keep an eye on your credit report   It's a history of all your credit accounts and will highlight any   irregularities such as suspect applications for credit and rises in card   balances. You can view your credit report free with a 30 day trial with   Experian CreditExpert.(ii)((i)New customers only. Monthly fee after trial   ends)    2. If in doubt, don't click   If an email purporting to be from a hotel or linked to the Games seems   suspicious, contact the relevant organisation and don't give out personal   details. Your bank, credit card provider and any reputable business will   never ask for confirmation of details by email.    3. If you do become a victim of fraud   Don't forget you can sign up to Experian's CreditExpert whose dedicated   victims of fraud team will work on your behalf to resolve the issue.  

    Notes to editors:

    1. The UK adult population is 48,091,600 (ONS). Sixteen per cent of adults are set to come to London during the Olympics. Therefore: 0.16 x 48,091,600 = 7,694,656 or 7.7 million.

    The population of Greater London is 7,753,000 (ONS) 24 per cent of Londoners are looking to leave the capital during some or all of the Games. Therefore: 0.24 x 7,753,000 = 1,860,720 or 1.9 million

    2. Based on analysis of information from the National Hunter anti-fraud data sharing system and the Insurance Hunter database.

    3. 0.02 x 7694656 = 153,893 or 154,000

    Key benefits of Experian CreditExpert membership:

    - Experian is the UK's most trusted credit reference agency

    - Experian is the credit expert with more than 30 years of experience

    - Free 30-day trial of CreditExpert(i)((i)New customers only. Monthly fee after trial ends)

    - Unlimited access to your Experian Credit Score

    - Weekly alerts of changes to your credit report

    - Access to an award-winning, UK-based customer services team

    - Identity Protection Insurance of up to GBP 75,000(ii) ((ii)terms and conditions apply)

    - Expert advice and tools to help improve your credit rating

    - Intelligent price matching to credit products suited to your credit history

    - Consumers can apply directly from the website: www.creditexpert.co.uk

    About Experian

    Experian is the leading global information services company, providing data and analytical tools to clients around the world. The Group helps businesses to manage credit risk, prevent fraud, target marketing offers and automate decision making. Experian also helps individuals to check their credit report and credit score, and protect against identity theft.

    Experian plc is listed on the London Stock Exchange (EXPN) and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 index. Total revenue for the year ended 31 March 2012 was US$4.5 billion. Experian employs approximately 17,000 people in 44 countries and has its corporate headquarters in Dublin, Ireland, with operational headquarters in Nottingham, UK; California, US; and Sao Paulo, Brazil.



    London picked as test bed for Skynet-like Intel tech - The Register

    London will be a guinea pig for future smart city technology after Intel pledged to spend a slice of £25m ($40m) on a new lab in the capital. The chipmaker will also plough millions into research centres dotted around Blighty.

    Intel will set up the unwieldily monikered Collaborative Research Institute for Sustainable Connected Cities in the capital in partnership with Imperial College and University College London, it announced yesterday at an event at 10 Downing Street.

    The company will spend the £25m over the next five years on all five of its Collaborative Research Institutes, but wouldn't give the breakdown of exactly how much London would be getting. ICL and UCL will also chip in some dosh, but again no figures were bandied about.

    At the same event, Chipzilla said it will open a string of research centres around the UK, investing around £45m in an Intel Labs Europe UK R&D network: this will employ 350 researchers in labs including the one in London and others in Brighton, Swindon and Aylesbury to start with, and five more to be decided on by the end of the year.

    "It is investments like this that will help us put the UK on the path we need to take to create new jobs, new growth and new prosperity in every corner of our country," Chancellor George Osborne said at the launch.

    "We are determined to make the UK the best place to do business in the world and a great place for technology companies to invest and build new business. It is encouraging to see major tech partners like Intel investing in this country as a result of the policies that the Government has put in place," he self-congratulated.

    Intel will use the London lab to suss out smart city technology and it will also team up with Shoreditch's Tech City entrepreneurs to use their "social media expertise" to "identify and analyse emerging trends with cities".

    "Using London as a testbed, researchers will explore technologies to make cities more aware by harnessing real-time user and city infrastructure data," the company said in a statement, describing similar Skynet-like smart city research elsewhere.

    "For example, a sensor network could be used to monitor traffic flows and predict the effects of extreme weather conditions on water supplies, resulting in the delivery of near real-time information to citizens through citywide displays and mobile applications."

    Justin Rattner

    Rattner: City under pre-planned stress

    Intel CTO Justin Rattner also said that the London Olympic games would give the firm a great opportunity to look at a city under pressure and figure out where the weak points are.

    "London is, as everyone knows, the host city to the 2012 summer Olympic Games, and we plan to use the event to understand the experiences of a city under pre-planned stress. What systems worked or didn’t work and why? How were the daily lives of the citizens, workers, and businesses of London affected?" he wondered out loud.

    As well as giving Intel the opportunity to see it mess up, London is also a good choice for the research institute as the fifth largest city in the world.

    "It has the largest GDP in Europe, and with over 300 languages and 200 ethnic communities, its diversity is a microcosm of the planet itself, offering an exciting test bed to create and define sustainable cities," Rattner enthused. ®


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